The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 4, 1986-- Page 3B U' avoids taking political stands Daily Photo by MATT PETRIE A comedy troup specializing in arms race humor performs on the Diag last April Fools Day. The group came to campus to protest "Star Wars" research here. W tude ns oppose research for military By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN University students protest for a multitude of reasons, but all protests have a similar theme; studenttac- tivists want the University to take stances on social issues, but ad- ministrators are unwilling. From the students' point of view, the University is losing an oppor- tunity to take "honorable" stances on political issues. University backing would do much to further such national causes as opposing the Strategic Defense Initiative. But in the past year, students have unsuccessfully urged the University to completely divest its investments in companies that do business in South Africa, grant jailed South African activist Nelson Mandela an honorary degfree, stop conducting SDI research, and ban recruitment by the Central Intelligence Agency on campus. Administrators disagree, Administrators say it's inap- propriate for the University to take such stances. "The University is a 'U'played c By MARY CHRIS JAKLEVIC In the 1960s, the University's political and social activism markedf it as a capital of dissent among American colleges., Since then, dissent has been a part of University life, although activism, today is seldom as bold or as widespread as it was in the late '60s and early '70s. Then, Ann Arbor rarely saw a day without demon- strations against national policies,, social practices or University policies. In the early '60s the issue was racial; discrimination. Prompted by the black civil rights movement, par-, ticularly the sit-in by four black students at a whites-only lunch coun- ter in North Carolina, students in the1 north picketed stores whose southern branches followed segregation, customs. In Ann Arbor several students were arrested for handingr out leaflets while picketing stores ac- cused of discrimination. Inspired by this movement andl enraged by the hypocrisy they saw in1 American society, a small group of University students formed what became the most influential national white student group of the decade, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). place to foster new ideas, not to take a definite stand on them," said Virginia Nordby, director of the University's Affirmative Action office and an ad- visor to the University's President. Administrators are also concerned that the stands espoused by student activists may not reflect a consensus of the University community. Another factor is economics. Because the University receives many contributions from alumni and corporations, administrators are wary of offending supporters. Regent James Waters (D- Muskegon), acknowledges that divestment was delayed partly out of concern of offending corporations. Some stances taken Dan Sharphorn, assistant policy advisor to Nordby, says that while the University is unwilling. to take stan- ces on most issues, "it has shown that it will not let anything interfere with an individual's rights." Sharphorn points to a 1984 regents' policy barring discrimination against homosexuals, as a "bold move" protecting individual rights. The University also passed a con- troversial resolution last October supporting University faculty who 'The University is a place to foster new ideas, not to take a definite stand on them.' -Virginia Nordby, director of Affirmative Action By ROB EARLE When University researchers sub- mitted $183 in research proposals to the defense department last winter, some protested that the University is becoming dependent on the military. The proposed projects were part of Congress' University Research Initiative, designed to revitalize the nation's . research universities through Department of Defense research. In July, the defense department ac- cepted three of the University's proposals, at least tripling military research on campus. URI is only the latest issue that has divided activists with ad- ministrators on the role of the military in University research. Defense research increasing In 1984-85, the University did nearly $7 million in defense-related resear- ch, about five percent of the Univer- sity's total research budget, accor- ding to Allan Price, the University's associate vice president for research. That figure, he said, is expected to grow by $560,000 in 1985-86, not in- cluding URI funds. The increases mean different things to different people. According to Linda Wilson, the growth is relatively insignificant because military research will still be only five percent of University research. Activists, though, say any growth in defense research is unacceptable, not to mention such large increases as URI funds. "University officials have chosen to misrepresent their actions to secure weapons research funds," wrote Ingrid Kock, the Michigan Student Assembly's military resear- ch expert. Kock was referring to an April 15 letter to the Daily, in which Vice President Wilson wrote that there is r Iphoto& campus services *l yS "no. . . University administration commitment to increase the fraction of DoD (Department of Defense) funding here." Wilson and Price, though, assert that individual faculty members and not the administration secure resear- ch funds. They attribute the increase in defense department research to the greater emphasis placed on military research - by the Reagan ad- ministration. Academic freedom In addition to opposing defense research because of its military ap- plications, groups like Campuses Against Weapons in Space (CAWS) and the Michigan Alliance for Disar- mament (MAD), also say the in- creasing reliance on defense funds compromises the University's autonomy, making it more succep- table to DoD control. Projects like URI and the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) are likely to be controlled by the military, critics say. URI projects, for example, must be related to the "mission" of the agency funding it-for example, the Air Force. While Wilson has expressed con- cern over concentrating federal research funds in the Department of Defense, she doesn't see an im- mediate threat to the - University's autonomy. In the case of URI, Wilson said that the military simply ad- ministers the funds and does not supervise the projects. Wilson, though, said that SDI is a potential threat to university resear- ch. The concentration on high technology and space that SDI presents weakens the nation's research in other areas, Wilson told the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science last srping. See 'U,' Page 7 542 LS&A 764-92161 M-F 8-12 1-5 I INSTANT Passport Photos - U-M Computer Sales Program " U-M Software Sales Student Discount, shot 1-4:30 onl choose to do SDI-related research. Anti-SDI activists were infuriated, by what they considered indirect sup port for the controversial program. But University President Harold- Shapiro defended the resolution as merely "a recapitulation of our, current policy. That is to let our. professors make their own decisions. as long as it follows our research guidelines." Regents felt campus protesters were pressuring researchers against SDI research. Although most conflicts seem to center between the administration and students, faculty also play a role:,- "It's a matter of checks and balances between the faculty, the ad- ministration, and the students," said William Stebbens, chairman of the faculty's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA). "When the students or the faculty' raises an especially good point about when the University should take g stand," administrators usually take it into consideration, he said. in importai SDS beginnings In the early '60s SDS consisted of a few. middle to upper class white males. They expressed thier dissatisfaction with American values through the Port Huron Statement which condemned racial and social inequality, bureaucracy, militarism and imperialism of the United States. This statement, often called one of the most important documents of the decade, reflected the growing dissatisfaction of American youth, which was fermenting on campuses across the country. Unlike other student efforts, SDS did not stop at the city limits. The group sought to form chapters on other campuses and to have a direct hand in curing America's social ills. SDS members such as Tom Hayden went to live, in poor black com- munities, and SDS sponsored a nation- wide project, based in Ann Arbor, which provided legal counseling and financial resources to encourage im- poverished urban Americans to seek political and economic clout. Todd Gitlin, a sociology professor at the University of California-Berkeley, was a member and president of SDS from 1963 until 1965. Gitlin said SDS activities made the University known as a center of political activism, and it was the chance to get involved in SDS* that lured him to the University for graduate school. "The reason Ann Arbor was critical (as a center of activism) was not just that people were politically active. (SDS founders) self-consciously saw themselves as trying to (create) a role in'60s protests national organization," he said. Focus on Vietnam A dramatic change, both for the country and SDS, came in 1965, when the U.S. bombed North Vietnam. SDS shifted its focus from civil rights mat- ters opposing the U.S.'s deepening involvement in Southeast Asia. See 'U,' Page 6 71 It y- ' . _ , ., , ~ , ,, w f' ' ik " . . a. 10 - 50% OFF WE'VE GOT HOT SAVINGS ON COOL MUSIC DURING OUR BACK TO' SCHOOL SALEI OUR ENTIRE CLOTHING INVENTORY. An additional 10% off with this ad. Alternative Clothing " Vintage Fashions 213 S. STATE (above Jason's) 995-9500 E ~04 F DRESS /' / -K WE ARE HERE FOR YOU! Monday - Friday 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. All Regularly Priced Cassettes and LP's in Stock.* GET MORE HOT SAVINGS ON COMPACT DISCS. Save On Regularly Priced Compact Discs Buy 2 and SAVE $1.00 on Each Compact Disc. Buy 3 and SAVE $2.00 on Each Compact Disc. Buy 4 and SAVE.$3.00 on Each Compact Disc. HURRY IN AND SAVE. A SALE THIS HOT WON'T LAST LONG! Se L - - - - - -- /- mu -- I rLninn ,fn-r a inhkThan "M I I I la I